The Molecules
Molecular solutes will not conduct electricity when dissolved in solution, and ionic solutes will conduct electricity when dissolved in solution.
no, a solution is when the particles(cereal) are fully dissolved in the liquid , but they arent
The molality is 0,07.
If you mean, "Why does filtering not separate a solute from a solution," then the answer is: Filtering is a mechanical process to remove physical particles of solid matter. If something is dissolved, like salt (the solute) in water (the solution) there are no physical particles of matter to remove - the salt is chemically dissolved and in solution.
The best example is the solution of sugar and water . When sugar is mixed repeatedly in water continuosly then a point comes where further it sugar dont get dissolved. Then the amount of sugar dissolved is the solution and the rest sugar is solvent .
Molecular solutes will not conduct electricity when dissolved in solution, and ionic solutes will conduct electricity when dissolved in solution.
They are in solution.
no, a solution is when the particles(cereal) are fully dissolved in the liquid , but they arent
Isotonic
isotonic solution
isotonic solution
Hypertonic solution
It is a solution in which the raw materials for mineral production are in abundance. A solution containing dissolved minerals.
Solvent
is it true
No, an ideal solution is completely different than a true solution. A true solution is where you can't differentiate between the solute and solvent molecules even at the microscopic level. It is completely homogeneous. For example, milk seems to be completely homogeneous but it isn't. Milk is actually has a suspension of fat molecules which are not dissolved at all. An ideal solution, on the other hand, is one where molecular interactions between solute molecules are absolutely zero, and it follows Raoult's law. No solution is in fact ideal (although many are close to ideal), but we do have true solutions.
I finally found the solution to my problem. Carbonated water is a solution containing dissolved carbon dioxide.